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Why Placing a Tea Towel on the Oven Door Is a Bad Idea

Why You Should Never Hang a Tea Towel on the Oven Door

It starts innocently. You’re cooking, the kitchen’s busy, and the sauce is bubbling over. Without thinking, you toss your tea towel on the oven door handle. It’s convenient—easy to grab when needed. I used to do the same, until one story changed my mind.

That “Harmless” Habit Isn’t So Harmless

Picture this: the oven is on, heating a pie or roasted veggies. That towel draped on the door slowly warms too. Fabric plus heat isn’t safe. It might not ignite immediately, but it could. Step away for a moment—take a call or fold laundry—and disaster can strike.

A friend of mine learned this the hard way. She left a damp towel on the oven while baking cookies. After a few minutes, she returned to burnt fabric, singed and stuck to the handle. No fire that time—but it could have easily escalated.

How Towels Can Ruin Your Oven’s Performance

A thick towel on the handle doesn’t just pose a fire risk. It can interfere with your oven’s seal, causing uneven heat. That tiny gap might seem minor, but it can undercook one side of your roast and overcook the other. Baking sensitive recipes—bread, cakes, or delicate pastries—becomes unpredictable.

I once wondered why half my roasted potatoes were perfect while the rest stayed raw. The culprit? A towel hanging on the oven door.

The Hidden Danger for Kids and Pets

If you have children or pets, the towel hazard escalates. A toddler tugging at the towel can swing open a hot oven door. Pets can do the same. Even a playful swipe could topple a stool or pull hot items down. The risk isn’t hypothetical—it’s real.

A Safer, Smarter Habit

The solution is simple: hang towels somewhere safe. Use a wall hook, drawer handle, or a dedicated towel rack. If you need it close while cooking, try an apron with a towel loop. This keeps the towel accessible, but out of harm’s way.

Small Change, Big Impact

Most of us never hear, “Don’t hang your tea towel on the oven door.” But it should be common sense. Fire hazards, uneven cooking, and kitchen accidents often start with small, overlooked habits. Moving the towel might take five minutes—but it prevents multiple risks.

Your kitchen should feel safe. A minor tweak like this ensures you can cook, bake, and move around without worry. While you’re at it, avoid other hazards too—like setting a Crockpot on the stovetop, even if it’s off. Small precautions make a big difference.

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